Sure, this weekend’s Mets vs. Yankees matchup is a pretty good show – but the curators of an upcoming museum exhibit say it pales next to the Subway Series this city used to know.

The years from 1947 to 1957 – an era that counted seven subway World Series – were the high point of Big Apple baseball history, said Sarah Henry of the Museum of the City of New York, which opens a show next month focusing on those glory days.

“It was an amazing 11 seasons,” Henry said yesterday. “A New York team was in the World Series every year but one. New York took home the championship nine times.”

The Brooklyn Dodgers and New York Giants were fierce National League rivals, with the all-time highlight the famous 1951 three-game playoff that culminated with Bobby Thomson’s ninth-inning “Shot Heard Round the World.”

The exhibit runs at the museum, on Fifth Avenue at 103rd Street, from June 27 to Dec. 31.